The example: President Obama's support from Congress and public for Afghanistan
Because Bush was considered so aggressive on war, starting the Iraq War by choice, and the main question Obama faces from many is 'will he do enough to protect the nation like Bush did, as he reduces our involvement as theanti-war candidate', almost no one questions Obama's Afghanistan policy, suggesting it's unnecessary. He can be attacked for not doing enough, but Bush has given him great license to do a lot and still be seen as 'doing less than Bush' and not called on it for being 'too much'.
If he didn't have the Bush history, it would be more comparable to Clinton, where every minor action by Clinton was challenged by the right - including his largest war effort, the war in Bosnia where not a single US soldier was killed, but the right was constantly questioning the war's necessity, and talking about the high price of risking US troops, and the need for the President to provide an exit plan, and so on.
This thread is just to point out the interesting effect of the inertia of things like a Bush presidency on his successor's freedom of options on war, in this case.
There's an old saying, 'only Nixon could go to China', because any other president who did so faced resistance about 'making friends with our enemy', but Nixon had a reputation as being so 'anti-communist' that he was mainly vulnerable to attacks of being to warlike, while any peace efforts were assumed to be 'ok' since he would never be too soft on communists.
It's just worh noting, IMO, how different an Obama can be treated on war issues, based on the 'political climate' of the time, from his predecessor.
Did Jimmy Carter's perceived weakness make it easy for Reagan to get away with an aggressive foreiggn policy, baccking violent policies in Central America? Perhaps.
Because Bush was considered so aggressive on war, starting the Iraq War by choice, and the main question Obama faces from many is 'will he do enough to protect the nation like Bush did, as he reduces our involvement as theanti-war candidate', almost no one questions Obama's Afghanistan policy, suggesting it's unnecessary. He can be attacked for not doing enough, but Bush has given him great license to do a lot and still be seen as 'doing less than Bush' and not called on it for being 'too much'.
If he didn't have the Bush history, it would be more comparable to Clinton, where every minor action by Clinton was challenged by the right - including his largest war effort, the war in Bosnia where not a single US soldier was killed, but the right was constantly questioning the war's necessity, and talking about the high price of risking US troops, and the need for the President to provide an exit plan, and so on.
This thread is just to point out the interesting effect of the inertia of things like a Bush presidency on his successor's freedom of options on war, in this case.
There's an old saying, 'only Nixon could go to China', because any other president who did so faced resistance about 'making friends with our enemy', but Nixon had a reputation as being so 'anti-communist' that he was mainly vulnerable to attacks of being to warlike, while any peace efforts were assumed to be 'ok' since he would never be too soft on communists.
It's just worh noting, IMO, how different an Obama can be treated on war issues, based on the 'political climate' of the time, from his predecessor.
Did Jimmy Carter's perceived weakness make it easy for Reagan to get away with an aggressive foreiggn policy, baccking violent policies in Central America? Perhaps.